Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil

Is knowledge management a buzz word, a management couture that grace publications headlines? Was it the star of the next big thing? This paper does not aim to answer the question or to predict the next big thing. It takes a simpler view of researching a pool of people on the influence of knowledg...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lim, Geok Chien
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20696/
_version_ 1848792118791766016
author Lim, Geok Chien
author_facet Lim, Geok Chien
author_sort Lim, Geok Chien
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Is knowledge management a buzz word, a management couture that grace publications headlines? Was it the star of the next big thing? This paper does not aim to answer the question or to predict the next big thing. It takes a simpler view of researching a pool of people on the influence of knowledge management in their daily work lives. The selected company is ExxonMobil, a petrochemical giant. It first goes into some definition of knowledge management and information. Then, it briefly touched on the phases of knowledge management evolution. After that, it meanders into a few selective works of academics and tries to understand the influence from the consultancy world. The paper takes inspiration from Nonaka and Takeuchi, Thomas H. Davenport and Yogesh Malhotra. Some of the theories were dwelled into. Perhaps the most referred to model came from Nonaka and Takuechi - the knowledge spiral. It explains how tacit and explicit knowledge are converted that spun a continuous web of learning and acquiring knowledge and how such knowledge etched on people's mind. Out of curiosity, the author tries to research on the effect of knowledge management on a particular group of employees. With virtual teams and globalisation as the daily work norm, the pool of candidates was taken from around the world. Questions were asked, answers were given. Is knowledge management just a lingo to generate work for the upper echelons or was it a process put in place to ensure business continuity? At least, the management is acknowledging it instead of not doing something about it. Conclusions were drawn from the research. Limitations though inevitable, were acknowledged. Ideas for future research spawned from the initial research were put across. This paper tries to make sense of Knowledge Management. But mostly, it is trying to understand people. People - the knowledge creators and how they left an imprint on the organisation.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:39:20Z
format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-20696
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:39:20Z
publishDate 2006
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-206962022-03-21T16:03:42Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20696/ Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil Lim, Geok Chien Is knowledge management a buzz word, a management couture that grace publications headlines? Was it the star of the next big thing? This paper does not aim to answer the question or to predict the next big thing. It takes a simpler view of researching a pool of people on the influence of knowledge management in their daily work lives. The selected company is ExxonMobil, a petrochemical giant. It first goes into some definition of knowledge management and information. Then, it briefly touched on the phases of knowledge management evolution. After that, it meanders into a few selective works of academics and tries to understand the influence from the consultancy world. The paper takes inspiration from Nonaka and Takeuchi, Thomas H. Davenport and Yogesh Malhotra. Some of the theories were dwelled into. Perhaps the most referred to model came from Nonaka and Takuechi - the knowledge spiral. It explains how tacit and explicit knowledge are converted that spun a continuous web of learning and acquiring knowledge and how such knowledge etched on people's mind. Out of curiosity, the author tries to research on the effect of knowledge management on a particular group of employees. With virtual teams and globalisation as the daily work norm, the pool of candidates was taken from around the world. Questions were asked, answers were given. Is knowledge management just a lingo to generate work for the upper echelons or was it a process put in place to ensure business continuity? At least, the management is acknowledging it instead of not doing something about it. Conclusions were drawn from the research. Limitations though inevitable, were acknowledged. Ideas for future research spawned from the initial research were put across. This paper tries to make sense of Knowledge Management. But mostly, it is trying to understand people. People - the knowledge creators and how they left an imprint on the organisation. 2006 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20696/1/06MBALIXGCL.pdf Lim, Geok Chien (2006) Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished) KM Knowledge Management
spellingShingle KM
Knowledge Management
Lim, Geok Chien
Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil
title Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil
title_full Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil
title_fullStr Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil
title_short Barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: A case study of ERP knowledge in ExxonMobil
title_sort barriers to knowledge sharing and utilisation in global project teams: a case study of erp knowledge in exxonmobil
topic KM
Knowledge Management
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20696/